Sorry, let me clarify. I am Episcopalian, which is the same thing as Anglican, only in the United States. So, we are not part of the Church of England. We are presently doing constructive stuff like fighting over the ordination of homosexual bishops.

Ted, I doubt that any society anywhere has ever been free of dogma. Every culture has dogmatic aspects because even when a myth or story is presented non-dogmatically and points the way to freedom from dogma, the way that the human mind works insures that some people will immediatly adopt it in a dogmatic way. All we can do is try to transmit the distrust of dogma from generation to generation. If you can get hold of it, an excellent book is Doris Lessing, Prisons We Choose to Live Inside.

[quote author=“burt”]Ted, I doubt that any society anywhere has ever been free of dogma.

True.

But we are finally getting to the point in human evolution where societies are starting to successfully get rid of its old dogma. Sweden (my home country) and other select countries in Europe are examples of societies where religious dogma is dying off – quite literally - with each generation.

Sorry.
I just assumed people were familiar with Easter Island. It was a society that self-exterminated by dogmatically following a religious belief.

They built those huge stone heads to please their gods. They evenutally cut down every tree on the island in order to move stones. Without trees, they could not survive.

The more trees they cut down, the worse their lives. So they cut down even more trees to please the gods, believing it would improve their lives.

As for Polynesia and Micronesia, they were colonized by the British and basically enslaved to pick breadfruit.

It is an assumption that the Easter Island Moa were constructed to “please the gods.” The general theories I’ve come across is that they were a result of inter-clan competition.

I know that you Joad define religion in a very narrow way as involving established churches, priesthoods, and so on, but anthropologically the peoples of Micronesia and Polynesia did have religion of the shamanistic and magical sort.

[quote author=“burt”]It is an assumption that the Easter Island Moa were constructed to “please the gods.” The general theories I’ve come across is that they were a result of inter-clan competition.

I know that you Joad define religion in a very narrow way as involving established churches, priesthoods, and so on, but anthropologically the peoples of Micronesia and Polynesia did have religion of the shamanistic and magical sort.

Fan-fuçking-tastic, burt. You gasbag. Once again, you’re operating far outside your real areas of competence in hopes that you can snow the ignorant masses that come online simply to read your precious words.

First of all, you have provided no definition of the word “religion” that would be adequate outside of any culture that could relate to the Indo-European roots of the word (of which, I might add, you have seemed to be aware at some point in the past). The Polynesians certainly cannot relate to your preconceptions, on a purely linguistic basis.

Whoever you are reading on the subject has no idea about the values of Polynesian cultures. Polynesians have no kinship system that is consistent with “clan” behavior. Polynesian culture adopted standards of “double descent” which are inconsistent with clan practices.

You are not interested in learning anything new. It is long since clear that you have bought into a spiritual ideology that requires you to repeat and believe certain articles of faith, while remaining conveniently unaware almost completely of any other inconvenient and conflicting facts. You are nothing but a gasbag spiritualist in Sufi garb.